The impact of well‐field configuration on contaminant mass removal and plume persistence for homogeneous versus layered systems

Abstract

A three‐dimensional numerical model was used to simulate the impact of different well‐field configurations on pump‐and‐treat mass removal efficiency for large groundwater contaminant plumes residing in homogeneous and layered domains. Four well‐field configurations were tested, Longitudinal, Distributed, Downgradient, and natural gradient (with no extraction wells). The reductions in contaminant mass discharge (CMDR) as a function of mass removal (MR) were characterized to assess remediation efficiency. Systems whose CDMR‐MR profiles are below the 1:1 relationship curve are associated with more efficient well‐field configurations. For simulations conducted with the homogeneous domain, the CMDR‐MR curves shift leftward, from convex‐downward profiles for natural gradient and Longitudinal to first‐order behaviour for Distributed, and further leftward to a sigmoidal profile for the Downgradient well‐field configuration. These results reveal the maximum potential impacts of well‐field configuration on mass‐removal behaviour, which is attributed to mass‐transfer constraints associated with regions of low flow. In contrast, for the simulations conducted with the layered domain, the CMDR‐MR relationships for the different well‐field configurations exhibit convex‐upward profiles. The nonideal mass‐removal behaviour in this case is influenced by both well‐field configuration and back diffusion associated with low‐permeability units.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Nov 23, 2017
Source ID
10.1002/hyp.11393

Entities

People

  • Mark L Brusseau
  • Zhilin Guo

Organizations

  • Environmental Security Technology Certification Program
  • National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
  • United States Department of Defense
  • University of Arizona

Tags

Readers

  • Aerosol Science/Aerosol Physics
  • Atmospheric Science/Meteorology
  • Geotechnical Engineering.